Assad
Allies Iran, Russia Consider Syria Options
30
August, 2013
The U.S.-led
military intervention in Syria would put Washington on a collision
course with two unwavering allies of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad
-- Iran and Russia.
Just
how Tehran and Moscow might react is a key part of the calculus that
U.S. President Barack Obama must consider in weighing his course of
action in Syria.
Although
analysts agree that neither country is likely to respond with direct
military support for Assad, they also don't expect Tehran or Moscow
to sit back passively. Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps
(IRGC) has said that an attack against Assad is a "red line"
that would trigger a response, although it has not said what that
response might be.
Iran's
reaction to date has been mild, with Tehran condemning both the use
of chemical weapons and threats of foreign military intervention.
According
to Will Fulton, an Iran analyst with the American Enterprise
Institute in Washington, the IRGC would likely not risk a direct
confrontation with the United States but could act through proxies,
including Hizballah in Lebanon or Shi'ite militias in Iraq.
Tehran
would also seek to capitalize on anti-U.S. reaction at home and
across the region. "I think we will absolutely see more
condemnations, more warnings from IRGC and hard-line officials, and
this will of course play into, especially, the IRGC's narrative that
the conflict in Syria is a conspiracy of Israel and the West,"
Fulton says. "So they will use this attack to fuel that
narrative and it will become a recruiting tool and a narrative
defense of their own foreign interference in Syria."
Proportional
Response
Dina
Esfandiary, a research associate at the International Institute of
Strategic Studies in London, believes Tehran would prefer to limit
its role in Syria, in part because Iran was itself a victim of
chemical weapons during the 1980s war against Saddam Hussein's Iraq.
"If
the U.S. and its allies are able to limit their air strikes and
target only a few targets in Syria, I think that it's likely that
Iran might react," Esfandiary says, "but they will really,
really limit the extent of their reaction because as a country that
has felt the impact of chemical weapons itself, it's very difficult
for them to go against action against chemical-weapons use."
In
any event, a strike on Syria would dim hopes that Iranian President
Hassan Rohani's election last month could lead to improved relations
between Tehran and Washington. Rohani, who has pledged to improve
relations with the West, could instead turn increasingly to longtime
ally Russia.
Iran's
Islamic Revolutionary Guards can be expected to use U.S. intervention
as a recruiting tool, one analyst says.
Iran's
Islamic Revolutionary Guards can be expected to use U.S. intervention
as a recruiting tool, one analyst says.
In
a telephone call initiated by Iran on August 28, Rohani discussed the
Syrian crisis with his Russian counterpart, Vladimir Putin. The two
presidents denounced the use of chemical weapons by "anyone,"
according to a Kremlin press statement, and called for a peaceful
resolution of the crisis "exclusively through political and
diplomatic means."
Russian
President Putin is expected to have his first face-to-face meeting
with Rohani on the sidelines of a Shanghai Cooperation Organization
summit in Kyrgyzstan in mid-September.
Bringing
Tehran, Moscow Closer
Iran
and Russia can be expected to work closely to protect their mutual
ally, says Andrew Kuchins, director of the Russia and Eurasia Program
at the Center for Strategic International Studies in Washington. "It
is not clear to what extent the Russians and the Iranians are
coordinating their support for Syria," he says. "But to the
extent that they are, a strike on [Syria] would almost inevitably
push Tehran and Moscow closer together to ensure that the Assad
government does not fall."
Nikolas
Gvosdev, professor of national security studies at the Naval War
College in Washington, agrees. He argues that Moscow could ultimately
respond to a strike against Syria by undoing years of Western policy
to isolate Iran over its disputed nuclear program. "The
longer-term prospect for the United States, maybe, is that Russia
begins to weaken the international sanctions regime on Iran or begins
to try to reintegrate Iran back into the family of nations in
defiance of U.S. preferences that sanctions be tightened on Tehran,"
he says.
Gvosdev
adds that Moscow could also respond to a strike against Syria by
stepping up its direct provision of military aid to Damascus or by
providing intelligence to mitigate the impact of an outside
intervention.
On
the other hand, Russia could see benefits in the United States
becoming embroiled in another conflict in the Middle East. Such a
scenario could allow Moscow to pursue its primary foreign-policy goal
of reintegrating the former Soviet space through Putin's proposed
Eurasian Union.
"If
the United States becomes involved in a prolonged effort in Syria,
beyond just a few military strikes at the beginning, but gets drawn
into policing Syria, having to do more to prevent the use of chemical
weapons, becoming involved in trying to stabilize the situation on
the ground -- that means there will be a lot less attention paid to
what goes on in the former Soviet space," Gvosdev explains.
U.S.-Russian
relations -- already at low ebb in recent weeks, most notably over
Moscow's granting of temporary asylum to former U.S. intelligence
contractor Edward Snowden -- would certainly suffer as a result of a
Western strike on Syria.
Russia
could slow down or suspend the Northern Distribution Network that
NATO uses to help supply forces in Afghanistan. Such a move could
make things more difficult for NATO as its deadline for withdrawing
combat forces from Afghanistan by the end of 2014 approaches.
"As
we know, there are pits that you can fall into forever," says
Aleksandr Golts, a military analyst and journalist based in Moscow.
"Just recently it seemed that relations between Moscow and
Washington had reached their nadir, but then came the Snowden affair
and we understood that it is always possible to fall a little
further."
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